Specs update

This is obviously feature creep. I’m concerned. :smiling_imp:

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:+1::joy:

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I vacuum mine weekly. To clean the staining I spray it with isopropyl alcohol and the use gojo orange cleaner on a large (4") fingernail type brush I got off Amazon. Then a rinse and back in (it pops out on the 60W machine - I have a nail bed for the K40). I don’t really get any honeycomb specific residue - just the backflow from the material cut itself so although it looks sketchy, it’s not really a problem to have a smokey honeycomb.

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On the topic of tray and all and cleaning… As this is supposed to be retail and appear to non tech non manual things people most of js fine with a brush to clean it but I know someone going to try the dishwasher… So dishwasher safe?

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I believe the tray is made from aluminium, although I think I may have read that it’s “handily magnetic”, if it is aluminium then that would be a no to dishwasher detergent. Aluminium and caustic preparations don’t play well together.

The tray is not aluminum as they have said that it is ferrous so that a magnet will stick to it.
It may be stainless of some type or a plain mild steel. Some stainless alloys do fine with dishwasher detergent, some not so much. Perhaps they will let us know what it is.

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All you doing is making thing thing less and less desirable. Also, I can’t get to the web site to check when I actually ordered this dud so I know what part of the “next” year we’ll need to wait.

You can send them an e-mail asking for the exact date of your order, or if you have the confirmation e-mai from the time you purchased the GF it should have the date…

The mail is (I believe so) support@glowforge.com

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I’d like to be able to stack pancakes instead of washers, but there is no standard thickness, so this could be an issue. However I could etch pictures onto them, then eat them. There will need to be a pancake etching setting.:grin:

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My cheap toaster has a thin metal crumb tray that can easily be slid out of the toaster to empty the crumbs into the compost bucket.

In my case it’s totally the opposite, I want it more every day, and in the meantime I’m studying F360 and other softwares to create my designs.

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My toaster can do some bread etching, but I think the Glowforge will do it better :stuck_out_tongue_winking_eye:

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My toaster only has a 6x5" bed size :slight_frown:

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My toaster etches both sides at once! Probably only in the hopper for the Forge.

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Toaster weaknesses:

  • 1x1 resolution
  • Gradient issues
  • Limited materiel compatibility
  • Limited format support (0)

It’s strengths:

  • Batch processing
  • Double sided printing
  • No internet requirement
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You’re wrong about the limited format support. It supports every format in the world, just as long as you’re willing to live with the single-pixel mapping and manual gamut control.

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Technically it wasn’t a requirement :wink:

“However, a human being still had to insert the bread.” and I assume they could operate it manually, definitely a feature though.

What I found a more terrifying internet addition:

Atleast they could only flush it and not operate a bidet :astonished: :flushed: :heart_eyes:

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They added a robot arm to drop bread in :slight_smile:

I just got an Opal ice machine (Kickstarter) and it’s bluetooth connected so I can set it when to make ice or stop and turn the lights on or off. It’s cool. I thought it was just tech pandering until I decided I wanted the night light on and used the app. (There’s only one glowing button to make the machine work.)

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